By Dr. Sophia Kidd
“Maps of No Return” traces the psychic cartography of Chinese-American artist He Gong, whose works chronicle the irretrievable passages of migration, memory, and myth. Drawing from his lived experience—from the Cultural Revolution’s forced rural exile to his transnational life between Chengdu and Los Angeles—He Gong paints not destinations, but dislocations. His canvases are less representations than rehearsals of return that never arrive.
Grounding this exhibition is Herbert Marcuse’s One-Dimensional Man, which critiques the flattening of thought and autonomy under advanced industrial society. In this light, He Gong’s visual language resists assimilation into a singular, consumable identity. His paintings reassert the multidimensionality of the human spirit—personal, historical, and philosophical—against the “rationalized” machinery of conformity. Each work functions as a counter-map: one that reclaims affective and spiritual terrain in a world that seeks to compress difference.
For Pacific Northwest audiences attuned to global migration, ecological precarity, and cultural diplomacy, this exhibition offers a resonant, soulful encounter. He Gong’s art does not lead the viewer forward, but inward—toward a deeper reckoning with the stories we carry and the ones we can no longer retrace. It is an aesthetic of longing, not loss; a call to remember the routes that remake us.



0 Comments